Andrew: this is a thread about Zoo misconceptions, and you are obviously labouring under a misconception of your own - they could not have been a 'Lady' and a 'Gentleman' if they use words like "eee" and "them's" !
Hix
Andrew: this is a thread about Zoo misconceptions, and you are obviously labouring under a misconception of your own - they could not have been a 'Lady' and a 'Gentleman' if they use words like "eee" and "them's" !
Hix
Someone thought it was okay to reach out and touch the two-toed sloth that too was reaching for him.
Similarly, when media actually do depict tapirs once in a blue moon, it's usually the Malayan one. I wonder why, since Brazilian tapirs (or lowland tapirs or whatever you call them) are much more ubiquitous in zoos. And one would think that most Western people generally only know tapirs from zoos...
Bears are like frogs. They hatch into bear tadpoles, their legs grow, then they lose their tails. Simples.
Recently, a friend of mine tried to explain what a tapir is, with the description "a mixture between a pig and a panda". Not immediately connecting that description to a Malayan tapir, I asked him: "Why a panda?". He replied: "Because it has the same black-and-white pattern as a panda" and didn't really seem to believe me when I told him that three out of four tapirs actually are brown (or mostly brown).
Similarly, when media actually do depict tapirs once in a blue moon, it's usually the Malayan one. I wonder why, since Brazilian tapirs (or lowland tapirs or whatever you call them) are much more ubiquitous in zoos. And one would think that most Western people generally only know tapirs from zoos...